This web site is dedicated to the life and work of Thomas S. Szasz,
M.D. In it you will find information from friends and colleagues sharing
similar points of view to those of Thomas Szasz on diverse topics ranging
from psychiatry and law, to drugs and addiction, to psychotherapy and public
policy . . . and more. We share a common philosophy here: Liberty and responsibility
are two sides of the same coin. No policy-- public or private--can increase
or decrease one without increasing or decreasing the other. Human behavior
has reasons, not causes.

The Szasz Site is updated irregularly.

Who is Thomas Szasz? He is Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus at the State
University of New York Health Science Center in Syracuse, New York, Adjunct
Scholar at the Cato Institute, Washington, D.C., author and lecturer. His
classic The Myth of Mental Illness (1961) made him a figure of international
fame and controversy. Many of his works--such as Law, Liberty, and Psychiatry,
The Ethics of Psychoanalysis, Ceremonial Chemistry, and Our Right to Drugs--are
regarded as among the most influential in the 20th century by leaders in
medicine, law, and the social sciences.

Born in Budapest in 1920, Thomas Szasz came to this country in 1938
from his native Hungary and within a few months was admitted to the University
of Cincinnati. After graduating with honors in Physics in 1941, he entered
the College of Medicine of the University of Cincinnati and won his M.D.
degree in 1944. Later, Szasz took his psychoanalytic training at the Chicago
Institute for Psychoanalysis and for the next five years was a member of
its staff--taking twenty-four months out for active duty with the U.S.
Navy. A FELLOW of the American Psychiatric Association and a LIFE member
of the American Psychoanalytic Association, Dr. Szasz has published frequently
in leading medical, psychiatric, and psychoanalytic journals. I have enclosed
a bibliography
of all his writings (34 pages) at this site for your information.

Reviewing Law, Liberty, and Psychiatry in the American Bar Association
Journal, former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
Arthur J. Goldberg wrote: "Dr. Szasz makes a real contribution by alerting
us to the abuses--existing and potential--of human rights inherent in enlightened
mental health programs and procedures. He points out, with telling examples,
shortcomings in commitment procedures, inadequacies in the protections
afforded patients in mental institutions and the dangers of over-reliance
on psychiatric expert opinion by judges and juries." Charles D. Aring,
M.D., Professor of Neurology, University of Cincinnati, praised the book
in these words: "One of the most important statements since the publications
of Freud. Law, Liberty and Psychiatry is likely to rank among the
classics of psychiatry." In an introduction to his writings and thought,
Professors Richard E. Vatz and Lee S. Weinberg wrote (1983) "Throughout
his distinguished career . . . Thomas S. Szasz has steadfastly defended
the values of humanism and personal autonomy against all who would constrain
human freedom with shackles formed out of conceptual confusion, error,
and willful deception."

John Leo, social science editor for U.S. News & World Report,
wrote in 1993 that "No one attacks loose-thinking and folly with half the
precision and zest of Thomas Szasz." Paul Roazen, author of Encountering
Freud, wrote in 1993 that "Thomas Szasz remains unique among contemporary
observers of the social, ethical, and political implications of psychiatry:
every argument he makes, and each word he chooses, are deserving of our
closest attention."

Many of you have been waiting a long time for this site and now it's
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send your comments, suggestions,
or possible contributions.